I don't know who put this together or who uploaded it to YouTube - it looks like it's assembled from bits of interviews that we did for the eventual Exeter "special features" - but while looking over there for an old Starship Farragut trailer with Don LaFontaine's voice-over I found this mini-documentary about Exeter:

EDIT: Looks like it was uploaded by Stan Ginsel, one of the producers. I don't know anything else about it.

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The end of this one says - Stay Tuned for part 2

So, given Exeter's history, I gotta ask: "Okay, how long do we have to wait for this now, too?"

Didn't this start is 2004? Egad, the cast will begin to age in the span of a single episode. Shades of "The Deadly Years"!

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Not quite. You're confusing "Production" with "Post-production". If I understand correctly, Production is done. All scenes are shot. Editing, inserting optical effects and scoring make up the post-production process, which is where the final act or acts are at this point. We are told that the process is continuing and that we will see the finished product...eventually....

Didn't this start is 2004? Egad, the cast will begin to age in the span of a single episode. Shades of "The Deadly Years"!

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Not quite. You're confusing "Production" with "Post-production". If I understand correctly, Production is done. All scenes are shot. Editing, inserting optical effects and scoring make up the post-production process, which is where the final act or acts are at this point. We are told that the process is continuing and that we will see the finished product...eventually....

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Actually no, you're confusing 'Production' with the varioys elements - Pre-Production -> Filming -> Post Production; but a project is 'In production' until there is a complete final product, or production is abandoned/terminated.

The episode (or at least the final part of it) is definiteltly still 'in production' (according to a couple of folks 'in the know'.)

Actually no, you're confusing 'Production' with the varioys elements - Pre-Production -> Filming -> Post Production; but a project is 'In production' until there is a complete final product, or production is abandoned/terminated.

The episode (or at least the final part of it) is definiteltly still 'in production' (according to a couple of folks 'in the know'.)

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Yet he is correct in spirit, because principal photography was completed in 2005, and I'm pretty sure that's what he was referring to.

Actually no, you're confusing 'Production' with the varioys elements - Pre-Production -> Filming -> Post Production; but a project is 'In production' until there is a complete final product, or production is abandoned/terminated.

The episode (or at least the final part of it) is definiteltly still 'in production' (according to a couple of folks 'in the know'.)

Click to expand...

Yet he is correct in spirit, because principal photography was completed in 2005, and I'm pretty sure that's what he was referring to.

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Quite right! Leave it to a Scotsman to put it in clearer English than a Yank!

Actually no, you're confusing 'Production' with the varioys elements - Pre-Production -> Filming -> Post Production; but a project is 'In production' until there is a complete final product, or production is abandoned/terminated.

The episode (or at least the final part of it) is definiteltly still 'in production' (according to a couple of folks 'in the know'.)

Click to expand...

Yet he is correct in spirit, because principal photography was completed in 2005, and I'm pretty sure that's what he was referring to.

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The proper term then is: "It's in the can." with regard to that aspect.

"It's in the can."...... I think those find folks at Think Geek are selling a Enterprise bottle opener, a Klingon wine bottle opener, a Enterprise pizza slicer.... now somebody needs to invent a Androian Can opener so we can get this beast out of the can onto the nets..... (and into my living room!!!!)